All films at the Beringia Interpretive Centre. Cash bar and finger foods Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Interested in car pooling or just need a ride...email outnorthqff@gmail.com.

OPENING NIGHTFriday, April 7, 2017​7:00 pmArrival

Written, Directed and Animated by Alex Myung, this 2D-animated film explores one boy's struggle to face the truth of his life and love, and reveal it to the person he cares about most. Arrival delves into the often unexamined ripple effect that hiding your true self has on loved ones around you.

FRI| APR 7| 7:00 pm| Alex Myung | USA | 2016 | 22 min

Official Trailer:​ https://vimeo.com/139551283​

8:00 pm​MoonlightPresented by Screening Sponsor:

At once a vital portrait of contemporary African American life and an intensely personal and poetic meditation on identity, family, friendship, and love, MOONLIGHT is a groundbreaking piece of cinema that reverberates with deep compassion and universal truths. Anchored by extraordinary performances from a tremendous ensemble cast, Barry Jenkins's staggering, singular vision is profoundly moving in its portrayal of the moments, people, and unknowable forces that shape our lives and make us who we are.

Tall, dark, androgynously handsome, Pierre wears eyeliner and a black laceg-string, while having sex with both boys and girls. The confusion only goes deeper when the teenager’s single, working-class mom is arrested for having stolen him (and his “sister”) at birth. SAT | APR 8 | 7:00 pm | Anna Muylaert | Brazil | 82 min | Portuguese with English Subtitles | Official Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHHvptOW774

9:00 pmBelow Her Mouth

This film is a bold, uninhibited drama that begins with a passionate weekend affair between two women. Dallas, a roofer and Jasmine, a fashion editor, share a powerful and immediate connection that inevitably derails both of their lives.

​ San Antonio Texas, 1994. Four Latina lesbians live through a modern-day witch hunt and the “last gasp of satanic ritual abuse panic” as they are accused – and unjustly convicted – of the sexual assault of two young girls. Director Deborah S Esquenazi takes us through an in-depth cultural study of the intersections of myth and justice in the criminal justice system, reveling how persistent homophobic and sexist biases (and an implied association with cults and covens) may have condemned the “San Antonio Four.” News clips, interviews, legal case writings, and family videos paint a disturbing but always compelling portrait of the women’s outrageous journey, which has not yet ended. SUN |APR 9 | 6:00 pm | Deborah S Esquenazi | USA | 2016 | 91 min | Rated PGOfficial Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yF3ChHyacHM

Followed by a Q&A with Darrell Otto​​In February 2006, Canadian research scientist, and long-time Yukoner Darrell Otto was researching female child molesters. He discovered a Texas case involving 4 lesbians convicted of a multi-perpetrator aggravated sexual assault on a 7 and a 9-year-old girl. Nearly every aspect of those allegations ran counter-current to known characteristics of female sex offenders. The case simply made no sense, and had been almost completely ignored by the Texas media. After extensive research, he began communicating with Elizabeth Ramierez (sentenced to 37.5 years), and eventually came to a clear conclusion – the crime never occurred. Darrell reached out to the National Center for Reason and Justice, which investigates false allegations of child abuse. From there, the Innocence Project of Texas picked up the case and eventually the 4 women were exonerated. Without Darrell’s tireless actions, the outcome for these women might have been entirely different. Darrell has agreed to share his extensive knowledge of the case, the women accused and what has happened since the documentary was released.

8:30 pmTwo soft things, Two Hard Things

An exploration of what happens when a remote Artic community decides to hold an LGBT2Q+ pride celebration. This documentary provides insightful historical grounding on how colonization, religion, forced migration, and cultural assimilation have impacted gender and sexuality in Inuit culture. Then the focus shifts – as it should – to Inuit traditions of sexuality and gender that predate colonial notions of pride and queerness.SUN | APR 9 | 8:30 pm | Mark Kenneth Woods, Michael Yerxa | CAN | 2016 | 71 min | Rated PGOfficial Trailer: https://vimeo.com/156786891​